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The Alexander Column is the focal point of Palace Square in Saint Petersburg. The monument was erected after the Russian victory in the war with Napoleon's France. The column is named for Emperor Alexander I, who reigned from 1801–25. Built in the Empire style in 1834 in the center of the Palace Square, the French architect Auguste Montferrand, Emperor Nicholas I to commemorate the victory of his older brother, Alexander I of Napoleon in the Patriotic War of 1812 . The monument is crowned by the figure of an angel by Boris Orlovsky. His left hand holds a four-point angel Latin cross, and the right rose to the sky. Angel's head tilted, his eyes fixed on the ground.
The opening of the monument took place on August 30 (September 11) in 1834 and marked the end of work on the design of the Palace Square. At a ceremony attended by the emperor, the imperial family, the diplomatic corps, one hundred thousandth the Russian army and representatives of the Russian army.